Madagascar votes for new leader, hoping to end crisis

Presidential candidate Hery Rajaonarimampianina casts his vote at a polling station

Dec 20, 2013

ANTANANARIVO - Madagascans voted Friday in a presidential run-off aimed at pulling the Indian Ocean island out of the political and economic doldrums and restoring democracy.

Islanders queued to cast ballots from 06:00 am (0300 GMT) in the hope of ending a crisis sparked by a 2009 coup which paralysed much of the government and caused foreign donors to cancel aid.

"I really want to see change in this country. For the past five years it's been truly horrible," said Fanjatiana Ramanantsoa as she stood in line to vote at a primary school in the capital Antananarivo.

Madagascar's main political rivals - interim leader Andry Rajoelina and the man he ousted, Marc Ravalomanana - were barred from running amid international pressure over fears of a return to violence.

Instead, vying for victory are the pair's proxy candidates who won the top two places during an inconclusive first round of voting on October 25.

Robinson Jean Louis, 61, a doctor and former health minister, is seen as a slight favourite after winning 21.16 per cent in the first round.

He enjoys the support of exiled leader Ravalomanana, who addressed his rallies via phone from South Africa.

His opponent, Hery Rajaonarimampianina, 55, an astute businessman and former finance minister under Rajoelina, won 15.85 per cent.

"It is hard to see who will be elected. The Malagasy are divided," said voter Henri Rakotomalala.

Many voters in the capital support Jean Louis and are nostalgic for the Ravalomanana years, from 2002 to 2009, when the country enjoyed relatively strong economic growth.

The milkman-turned-political magnate rose from obscurity to become a powerful businessman and then president.

He was forced from office by Rajoelina, then mayor of Antananarivo, amid violent street protests by Madagascans angry at Ravalomanana's perceived authoritarianism and failure to spread the wealth.

"This is a turning point in Madagascar's history," Jean Louis told AFP, after voting in the capital.